Alabama man finally meets the woman from Germany— his one in 24 million match — who saved his life with her bone marrow donation

Alina Franke registered to donate her bone marrow in Hamburg, Germany, in 2009. She wound up being the one person in 24 million around the world on the Be The Match registry to be the perfect match that Jimmy Roberson needed.

It took a harrowing diagnosis of aplastic anemia, two unsuccessful chemotherapy treatments, 50 blood transfusions, more than 25 platelet injections, and almost three years and 4,650 miles before Talladega, Alabama, native Jimmy Roberson could meet who he says is his angel here on Earth. Her name is Alina Franke, a 27-year-old Hamburg, Germany, native who donated stem cells way back in 2009, all because she hoped to help someone in need one day.

That someone turned out to be Roberson, a former Talladega County commissioner and Chelsea City Council member. And this week, Franke and her boyfriend, Christoph Kleeberg, traveled from Germany to the United States to meet Roberson and his wife, Michele, for the first time. The meeting at the Birmingham International Airport was emotional for Roberson and Franke, who had previously communicated through email, but never spoken to one another.

“Neither one of us could talk at first,” Roberson said of the airport meeting. “We were hugging, and I don’t know if I was shaking and it was shaking her, but we both were shaking. And we were in silence for 30-45 seconds. I finally just told her that I wanted to thank her for saving my life, and that she’d always be my angel. Always.”

“It was an emotional experience, for sure,” Franke said. “I didn’t think I would ever meet my recipient. When I learned someone was going to benefit from my stem cells, I was just excited to learn someone was being helped.”

“The clock was ticking on my life, and fortunately, my angel was found,” Roberson said. “I would not be here today without her kindness, her selflessness and her willingness to give of herself, all in the name of helping a total stranger — one who ultimately wound up being half a world away.”

And they both hope sharing their story will encourage someone, somewhere to consider registering to be a bone marrow donor and, perhaps, being someone else’s one in 24 million chance at living their life healthy and free of a deadly disease.

Aplastic anemia develops when damage occurs to the bone marrow, slowing or shutting down the production of new blood cells. The condition is considered a very rare hematologic emergency, with fewer than 20,000 cases in the United States reported each year. The mortality rate can be greater than 70 percent, depending on a person’s response to available treatments.

“Between my wife and the care team at UAB — I would never even have had the opportunity to be alive long enough to get the transplant, and even after the transplant when I had some really bad days when my body was trying to reject the bone marrow,” Roberson said. “My doctors, Antonio DiStasi, Racquel Innis-Shelton, Luciano Costa, Donna Salzman and many others, and then my nurses, Lea Freeman, Jay Smith, Tiffani Hill, Becky Howard, Melissa Sentell, Binita Parekh and so many others — everyone, literally everyone, in UAB’s bone marrow unit are family to me. I visit the unit even when I don’t even have an appointment and bring them doughnuts. I just love them and thank them for everything they did for me.”

After the transplant, Roberson spent 49 nights in the bone marrow unit, battling 103-105 degree fevers that had UAB nurses laying him on an ice mattress to try to get his fevers down. At one point, he had double pneumonia, and they told his wife that he was critical.

“But eventually, I started getting better. Then I started getting stronger, and the team that cared for me at the hospital was a big reason. Then I thought a lot about my donor and all he or she did to help me — I didn’t know who my donor was at the time. I was thinking about my wife and my grandchildren and how much I didn’t want to leave them. I felt like I had to keep fighting.”

After Roberson improved enough to go home and he continued to regain his strength, he hoped to one day meet his donor. Typically, recipients can ask the Be The Match Foundation to reach out to donors to see if they would be willing to connect one year after the transplant. But in Roberson’s case, he had to wait two years to comply with Germany’s rules on contact with donors.

When the Be The Match Foundation connected with Franke, she said she was willing to learn who the recipient of her bone marrow was. After the Robersons and Franke had written each other through email over several months, the Robersons offered to host Franke and Kleeberg any time they wanted to come to the United States.

“Alina is very humble, and she did not donate to receive recognition,” Roberson said. “She did it purely out of the kindness of her own heart. I can never repay her for what she did, but Michele and I could tell her how much we appreciate what she did and love her for what she did.”

Franke and Kleeberg have spent this week with the Robersons at their lake house in Ohatchee. They came to the UAB bone marrow unit so the Robersons could introduce their hero to the staff who cared for him. The Robersons have been introducing the couple to Southern food and the Southern lake lifestyle, riding up and down the lake on boats and jet skis. They’ve been learning more about each other. They’ve been living life to the fullest.

And they both hope sharing their story will encourage someone, somewhere to consider registering to be a bone marrow donor and, perhaps, being someone else’s one in 24 million chance at living their life healthy and free of a deadly disease.

“What I learned as a donor in this process is that it was not a big deal to donate stem cells at all,” Franke said. “It’s not invasive. There was no pain at all. It was very, very easy. I certainly hope others will consider doing the same.”

“It would be great if our story would bring in more participants to the Be The Match Foundation list,” Roberson said. “I was getting blood transfusions weekly in The Kirklin Clinic, and there were so many patients like me who just didn’t have a match. I’m not just talking about 50-year-olds. I’m talking about children, too. It breaks your heart when you see all of the young children and mothers and fathers still looking for a match, and they can’t get one. So, I would just say please be a member of the Be The Match Foundation. It’s no cost to the donor at all, and all you’re doing is saving the life of another human being.”